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Balancing Knowledge Among Resident Specialties: Lecture-Based Training and the OUCH Card to Treat Children's Pain. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • There are gaps in residents' understanding of how to assess and treat acute pain in hospitalized children, prompting the need for improved training.
  • A pediatric pain management curriculum, which included lectures and training on using the OUCH card (a handy reference tool), was tested among residents from various specialties to assess its effectiveness in enhancing knowledge.
  • Preliminary results indicate that this training and the OUCH card can help unify knowledge across different specialties and should be considered by faculty to improve education and clinical practice in pediatric acute pain management.

Article Abstract

Background: There are well-established deficiencies in residents' knowledge of acute-pain assessment and treatment in hospitalized children.

Methods: Among residents in 3 specialties (anesthesiology, orthopedics, and pediatrics), we investigated whether a pediatric pain management (PPM) curriculum that offered a lecture combined with a demonstration of how to use the OUCH card would yield higher performance on a subsequent PPM knowledge assessment. The OUCH card was created as a portable reference tool for trainees to provide analgesic dosing information, pain-assessment tools, and treatment of opioid-induced adverse effects. There was an initial convenience sample of 60 residents randomized to Form A or B of the pretest. From this, 39 residents (15 anesthesiology, 13 orthopedic, 11 pediatric) completed a PPM knowledge posttest approximately 4 weeks after the pretest, PPM lecture, and OUCH card instruction.

Results: Using a repeated measure design, the interaction of resident specialty and pretest to posttest scores was significant (P  =  .01) along with the covariate of residency year (P  =  .026).

Conclusions: These preliminary data based on a convenience sample of residents suggest that PPM training along with use of the OUCH card may help to reduce knowledge differences among residents. Faculty whose clinical practice includes children with acute pain should consider including learning or performance aids like the OUCH card in education and clinical care for its potential benefit in resident learning.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2931219PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4300/JGME-D-09-00063.1DOI Listing

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